goosetown
Mame
Alright, so this is my first attempt at transforming a tree - and I mean really going after it, at least for me. Of COURSE, I neglected to take even a single before picture - or I at least can't find any that I took. Which is a shame because the transformation - good, bad or ugly - was drastic.
Oh well.
A bit of background on this one: bought it a few months ago for $70; I was told it was a shimpaku, but I don't think it is. The foliage is scaled but the bark doesn't look right. However, the bark DOES weathered and old, which is great, because I think it's only about 15 years or so. It's roughly 20" from root to tip. It was FULL when I bought it. I did some digging at the nursery, really liked the root structure, and thought the branch structure looked right for something of a tiered informal upright.
Got it home, let it sit a few weeks, blah blah blah, and then went at it really carefully one day. I did a little cleaning up and a lot of looking and pondering. What I found was that it wasn't quite what I thought it was; the branches were not in optimal positions, even for wiring. The only reasonable front featured nice lower branches that were, unfortunately, almost perpendicular. Also, it was FAR more upright than I'd hoped; it leaned a little, but the trunk was likely too thick to manipulate further. I was bummed. So rather than slice it up more, I decided to back away for a couple months until I "saw" it.
Driving back from Palm Springs a couple of weeks ago, I saw it. It was a desert tree - wish I could tell you which kind - that was old as all hell, 75% deadwood and windblown to roughly the same angle as the tree that had perplexed me. What struck me was that what little foliage was left was bright and thriving.
Today, taking a break from work, I decided I'd finally tackle the job of getting my tree on the road to bonsai. Worked for a couple hours to wire, then to take off just the right amount of greenery; it was most of the foliage, obviously, but it looked right, just as it did in my mind. Then I wired some more, trimmed a little more, and eventually...ended up with this guy:
The plan is now to leave it alone for a year, let it set in position, and then start to deadwood. I'm going to start with the majority of the left side of the tree and see how that looks. Eventually, I want it to appear both healthy and seeming as though it's fighting to hang on. But we'll see what happens.
Any comments/advice/thoughts are appreciated. I have no earthly idea if this is "right" or not by typical standards, but I look at it and I'm really thrilled I could get out what was in my head. I suppose that's a step in the right direction.
Oh well.
A bit of background on this one: bought it a few months ago for $70; I was told it was a shimpaku, but I don't think it is. The foliage is scaled but the bark doesn't look right. However, the bark DOES weathered and old, which is great, because I think it's only about 15 years or so. It's roughly 20" from root to tip. It was FULL when I bought it. I did some digging at the nursery, really liked the root structure, and thought the branch structure looked right for something of a tiered informal upright.
Got it home, let it sit a few weeks, blah blah blah, and then went at it really carefully one day. I did a little cleaning up and a lot of looking and pondering. What I found was that it wasn't quite what I thought it was; the branches were not in optimal positions, even for wiring. The only reasonable front featured nice lower branches that were, unfortunately, almost perpendicular. Also, it was FAR more upright than I'd hoped; it leaned a little, but the trunk was likely too thick to manipulate further. I was bummed. So rather than slice it up more, I decided to back away for a couple months until I "saw" it.
Driving back from Palm Springs a couple of weeks ago, I saw it. It was a desert tree - wish I could tell you which kind - that was old as all hell, 75% deadwood and windblown to roughly the same angle as the tree that had perplexed me. What struck me was that what little foliage was left was bright and thriving.
Today, taking a break from work, I decided I'd finally tackle the job of getting my tree on the road to bonsai. Worked for a couple hours to wire, then to take off just the right amount of greenery; it was most of the foliage, obviously, but it looked right, just as it did in my mind. Then I wired some more, trimmed a little more, and eventually...ended up with this guy:
The plan is now to leave it alone for a year, let it set in position, and then start to deadwood. I'm going to start with the majority of the left side of the tree and see how that looks. Eventually, I want it to appear both healthy and seeming as though it's fighting to hang on. But we'll see what happens.
Any comments/advice/thoughts are appreciated. I have no earthly idea if this is "right" or not by typical standards, but I look at it and I'm really thrilled I could get out what was in my head. I suppose that's a step in the right direction.